THIDIAZURON
Plant growth regulator
phenylurea |
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NOMENCLATURE
Common name thidiazuron (BSI, E-ISO, (m) F-ISO,
ANSI)
IUPAC name 1-phenyl-3-(1,2,3-thiadiazol-5-yl)urea
Chemical Abstracts name N-phenyl-N'-1,2,3-thiadiazol-5-ylurea
CAS RN [51707-55-2]
Development
codes SN 49 537 (Schering) |
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PHYSICAL
CHEMISTRY
Mol. wt. 220.2 M.f. C9H8N4OS Form Colourless, odourless crystals. M.p. 210.5-212.5 ºC (decomp.) V.p. 4 ´ 10-6 mPa (25 ºC) (Langmuir method) KOW logP = 1.77 (pH 7.3) Henry 2.84 ´ 10-8 Pa m3 mol-1 (calc.) Solubility In water 31 mg/l (pH 7, 25 ºC).
In hexane 0.002, methanol 4.20, dichloromethane
0.003, toluene 0.400, acetone 6.67, ethyl acetate
1.1 (all in g/l, 20 ºC). Stability Rapidly converted to photoisomer, 1-phenyl-3-(1,2,5-thiadiazol-3-yl)urea,
in presence of light (l >290 nm). Hydrolytically stable at
room temperature from pH 5-9. No decomposition
in accelerated storage stability study (14 d,
54 ºC).
pKa 8.86 |
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COMMERCIALISATION
History Plant growth regulator reported by F.
Arndt et al. (Plant Physiol.,
1976, 57, Supplement, p. 99). Introduced
by Schering AG (now Aventis CropScience). Patents DE 2506690; DE 2214632 Manufacturers Aventis |
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| APPLICATIONS
Biochemistry Cytokinin activity.
Mode of action Plant growth regulator, absorbed by the leaves,
which stimulates formation of an abscission
layer between the plant stem and the leaf petioles,
causing the dropping of entire green leaves. Uses Used for defoliation of cotton, in order to facilitate harvesting. Formulation types EC; WP; Oily flowable.
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ANALYSIS
Product analysis
by hplc. Residues determined by hplc
or by glc with ECD of a derivative. Details
available from Aventis.
MAMMALIAN
TOXICOLOGY
Oral Acute oral LD50 for mice >5000, rats >4000 mg/kg. Skin and eye Acute percutaneous LD50 for rats >1000,
rabbits >4000 mg/kg. Mild eye irritant; non-irritating
to skin (rabbits). No skin sensitisation (guinea
pigs). Inhalation LC50 (4 h) for rats >2.3 mg/l air. NOEL (90 d) for rats 200 mg/kg diet; (1 y) for dogs 100 mg/kg diet. No significant
effects observed in a 2 y carcinogenicity study
in mice and a 3-generation reproduction study
in rats.
Other Acute i.p. LD50 for rats 4200 mg/kg. Non-mutagenic. Toxicity class WHO (a.i.) III (Table 5); EPA (formulation) III |
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ECOTOXICOLOGY
Birds Acute oral LD50 for Japanese quail >3160 mg/kg. Dietary
LC50 (8 d) for bobwhite quail and mallard
ducks >5000 mg/kg diet.
Fish LC50 (96 h) for rainbow trout, bluegill sunfish,
and catfish >1000 mg/l.
Daphnia LC50 (48 h) >10 mg/l. Bees Non-toxic to honeybees. Worms LC50 (14 d) for earthworms >1400 mg/kg.
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ENVIRONMENTAL
FATE
Animals In rats and goats, metabolism involves hydroxylation
of the phenyl group, followed by formation of
water-soluble conjugates. Following oral administration,
the compound is excreted in the urine and faeces
within 96 hours.
Plants Only small amounts of residue (normally <0.1 mg/kg) are likely in cottonseed.
Soil/Environment Strongly adsorbed by soil. DT50 in soil c. 26-144 d (aerobic), 28 d
(anaerobic). Essential soil microbial processes
are only temporarily influenced, if at all. |
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